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Posts Tagged ‘Tel Aviv’

Bar Rafaeli’s first film premieres in Israel

Bar Rafaeli5Israeli top model Bar Rafaeli is following in the footsteps of her American boyfriend, Hollywood actor Leonardo DiCaprio, after her first feature film, “Session”, had its Israel premiere. In the English-language movie by Israeli director Haim Bouzaglo, Rafaeli, 25, plays a waitress in a sushi bar, where she gets to know a psychiatrist, in a [...]

The Twilight Singers: Euro Tour & US In-Stores

EUROPEAN TOUR & TWO US IN-STORES
IN SUPPORT OF NEW ALBUM DYNAMITE
STEPS


The Twilight Singers

The Twilight Singers will
embark on their first European tour in five years beginning March 18 in London at the Electric Ballroom. Tickets for
most shows go on sale on this week. Dates are still being added and more will be announced in the coming
weeks.

The band will celebrate the launch of their forthcoming album Dynamite Steps (Out in the US on
February 15 and worldwide on February 14) by performing two special shows at Amoeba Music in Los Angeles (Feb
15) and the San Francisco Amoeba Music store (Feb 17) the week of release. These will be the first ever in store
performances for the group.

The following week, The Twilight Singers will return to Jimmy Kimmel Live on February 23rd to perform their
latest single “On The Corner” The song is currently available as a free download at the Sub Pop Records website here.

The Twilight Singers 2011 European Tour

3/18/11 London – Electric Ballroom
3/19/11 Glasgow – Arches
3/20/11 Manchester – Moho Live
3/21/11 Brighton – Komedia Theatre

3/23/11 Cologne – Luxor

3/25/11 Oslo – Parkteatret
3/26/11 Stockholm – Debaser

3/27/11 Copenhagen – Vega Jr
3/28/11 Berlin – Festsaal Kreuzberg
3/30/11 Brussels – Ancienne Belgique
3/31/11 Paris – La Fleche D’Or
4/01/11 Amsterdam – Paradiso

4/02/11 Lucerne – Schuur

4/09/11 Vienna – Meet Factory
4/10/11 Warsaw – Stodola
4/12/11 Helsinki – Tavastia

4/14/11 Thessaloniki – Principal Theater
4/15/11 Athens – Gagarin Club

4/16/11 Tel Aviv – Reading3
4/17/11 Tel Aviv – Reading3

The Twilight Singers
Tour Dates

::
The Twilight Singers News
::
The Twilight Singers
Concert
Reviews


Ex-Israeli president found guilty of rape

Israel’s former President Moshe Katsav has been convicted of rape by a court in Tel Aviv and could go to jail.

He was found guilty of raping an employee in the 1990s when he was tourism minister and of later sexual offences while he was president.

Belgrade club in Euroleague Top 16

Partizan Belgrade basketball team secured their place in the Euroleague Top 16. This came as Maccabi from Tel Aviv defeated the Russian Khimki by 80-76 (18-15, 12-22, 29-18, 21-21) in the ninth round of Group A on Thursday evening.

Madonna Hard Candy Gym Mexico Facing Shutdown

Madonna flew into Mexico City Monday to open her new Hard Candy Fitness Gym, but patrons won’t be feeling the burn for long, if local officials have anything to say about it. The club she launched this week is in danger of being shut down because it lacks a security plan and a land use [...]

Monotonix: Tour Dates

TOUR STARTS OCTOBER 9 IN LOS ANGELES
NEW SINGLE AVAILABLE TO LISTEN TO AND
DOWNLOAD


Monotonix

Tel Aviv’s Monotonix will be back on
the road starting October 9 in Los Angeles at the Culture Collide Festival. The tour will run through cities like
Vancouver, Portland, San Francisco, San Diego, Dallas, and others before ending on November 6 in Austin, Texas.

The band will be playing new material off their upcoming record, produced by Steve Albini. This will be
their first LP since last September’s Drag City release, Where Were You When It Happened?. Click here to listen to and/or
download
the song “Give Me More” off the upcoming album.

MONOTONIX TOUR DATES

Saturday, Oct. 9 – Los Angeles, CA @ Culture Collide Festival

Sunday, Oct. 10 – Los Angeles, CA @ Culture Collide Festival

Monday, Oct. 11 – Vancouver, BC @ Biltmore Cabaret w/ Ty Segall

Tuesday, Oct. 12 – Bellingham, WA @ Wild Buffalo w/ Ty Segall

Wednesday, Oct. 13 – Olympia, WA @ The Brotherhood w/ Ty Segall

Thursday, Oct. 14 – Portland, OR @ Mississippi Studios w/ Ty Segall

Friday, Oct. 15 – Eugene, OR @ WOW Hall w/ Ty Segall

Sunday, Oct. 17 – San Francisco, CA @ Treasure Island Festival

Saturday, Oct. 30 – Visalia, CA @ The Cellar Door

Sunday, Oct. 31 – San Diego, CA @ Casbah

Monday, Nov. 1 – Phoenix, AZ @ Rhythm Room

Tuesday, Nov. 2 – San Antonio, TX @ Korova

Wednesday, Nov. 3 – Monterrey, Mexico @ Escenica

Thursday, Nov. 4 – McAllen, TX @ Las Palmas Event Center

Friday, Nov. 5 – Dallas, TX @ The Loft

Saturday, Nov. 6 – Austin, TX @ Fun Fun Fun Festival

Monotonix
Tour Dates

::
Monotonix News
::
Monotonix
Concert
Reviews


Israeli entrepreneurs: MBAs are for wusses

Military service makes Israeli techies tougher

MANY Israeli start-ups should pay royalties to the army, says Edouard Cukierman, a venture capitalist in Tel Aviv. He is only half joking. Despite the recession, Israel’s technology exports grew by more than 5% last year. Mr Cukierman thinks military service deserves some of the credit. Israel’s army does not just train soldiers, he says; it nurtures entrepreneurs.

Teenagers conscripted into high-tech units gain experience “akin to a bachelor’s degree in computer science”, says Ruvi Kitov, co-founder and chief executive of Tufin Technologies, an Israeli software firm. Almost all of Tufin’s employees in the country are, like Mr Kitov himself, veterans of the Israel Defence Forces (IDF). One of the firm’s cash cows is software that finds spam servers and blocks their transmissions. It is based on IDF cyberwarfare technologies that developers first used as soldiers. …

Rihanna’’s wardrobe malfunction during Israeli gig

Rihanna’s first move to woo the Israel audiences went awry when she had an embarrassing wardrobe malfunction during her first performance in the country.
The ‘Umbrella’ singer was presenting a gig in the Holy Land as part of her ‘Last Girl on Earth’ tour, which began three weeks ago in Europe.
However, the 22-year-old Barbados native wasn”t [...]

Tel Aviv police hunt suspected terrorists

Israeli police today mounted a large-scale manhunt for a pair of suspected terrorists, fearing that they might have intended to blow up a bus in Tel Aviv. Israli daily Haaretz reports on its website that police were using “helicopters, dogs and sappers”, as they searched for a man and a woman suspected of attempting to carry out the attack.

Yo La Tengo: From Monk to the Mets

By: Ron Hart

Yo La Tengo

Yo La Tengo of Hoboken, NJ, formed 25 years ago when New York Rocker scribe and local soundman Ira Kaplan met artist Georgia Hubley, daughter of legendary Disney animator John Hubley, and the two bonded over records and the New York Mets. Since then, alongside longtime bassist James McNew, the band has established themselves as one of the truly great American rock bands in modern times, with a sage-like knowledge of pop history and ability to collaborate with just about anyone under the sun, be it El-P of Company Flow, NYC jazz greats Other Dimensions in Music or Howard Kaylan of The Turtles.

2009 saw the trio release Popular Songs, their 12th album and most adventurous since 2000′s masterful And Then Nothing Turned Itself Inside-Out. JamBase had the privilege of catching up with Ira Kaplan while Yo La were on a brief trip back home in Hoboken. Our conversation touched on TV series Monk, Spinal Tap, taking a hiatus from the band’s long-running tradition of playing Maxwell’s during the week of Hanukkah, bootlegging, and the razing of Shea Stadium, among other topics.

JamBase: While you were in Europe over the holiday season, I read on your blog that you wound up watching Monk in the ancestral home of Hans Christian Andersen.

Ira Kaplan: [Laughs] Yeah, we were in Copenhagen and Monk came on in the middle of the night. It was like a postcard from home.

JamBase: Was he just as neurotic in Denmark as he is in the U.S.?

Ira Kaplan: [Laughs] You know, when you’re traveling, he seems to make perfect sense. I mean, we already like that show, but we’ve had experiences with things you would never watch anywhere else. It’s like, “Oh look, they’re speaking English. I would love to watch Ally McBeal.”

Wreckless Eric and Amy Rigby opened for you guys in Europe. How was it touring with Eric?

We’ve known Eric for a couple of years now, and he’s nothing but a prince to us.

You guys cast such a wide net on who you all work with. I always go back to your Hanukkah shows at Maxwell’s and all the different people who jump onstage with you.

Well, that’s how we met Eric. Eric came to one of the shows and we did some stuff together.

Were you guys bummed that you couldn’t do the Maxwell’s run this past holiday season?

Well, a little bit, but only a little. We know it was the right decision, so why focus on that aspect of it? We’ve had a great year, so we just enjoy the fact that we’ve been too busy to do this other thing that under other circumstances would have been ready.

When did you start those Hanukkah shows?

Yo La Tengo :: March, 2010 :: Tel Aviv by Goni Riskin

2001. For a couple of years, the notion of having some kind of holiday party where we would maybe just play free for our friends seemed like a good idea. We just wanted to do some kind of commemorative something-or-other. And then it would come around we’d be like, “Yeah, this is exactly what the world needs, another Christmas party [laughs].” So, the idea would just go by the wayside. Then one year, not really as a joke but with some element of humorousness, I said, “Oh, why don’t we play all eight nights of Hanukkah.” And I think it seemed audacious to play eight nights in a row. But it just had such a good combination of funny and… what was that Spinal Tap line?

Oh man, it’s been a while.

I just had to look up that line: “The fine line between clever and stupid.” That’s what I thought we were doing, combining clever and stupid [laughs].

I actually heard a couple of your shows on NYCTaper.com, who I believe has consent to tape your shows?

Yeeaaaah.

Are you cool with it?

Well, you know it’s a funny thing. Like a lot of things in this world, I am of two minds about it. I feel like people are gonna do stuff like that anyway and when these things are kinda out there, it means they’re not…. well, now this is a bit different with the Internet. But back before the Internet, we were allowing people to do that, because I didn’t really want people buying them or selling them. You go into these stores and see bootlegs that are like really expensive. So I thought, before it becomes this really rare commodity, you’re not gonna stop it from being done. So yeah, we just focus on that aspect of it and if people are interested [in taping us], that’s flattering. To be perfectly honest, I like to play shows as if no one will ever hear it again, and the fact that people do hear them again is a mixed blessing [laughs].

I hear what you are saying.

It’s just kinda the magic of the moment. You make records to be listened to again and again and you play live to try for something more ephemeral. But that’s just one side of it. The other side of it is that it’s certainly flattering that people care.

Have you guys ever thought about putting out an official live album?

Yo La Tengo

We’ve talked about it here and there among different things. One of the things is that it’s just not that much fun to work on, but we’ll see what happens. [Writer's note: There is one great live document of Yo La Tengo officially available, and that's their compilation of performances during their yearly cover-thon for the WFMU pledge drive, where the band will play anything the callers request on the spot, which the group sells on their website].

I noticed on Popular Songs you play a lot more keyboards than usual.

Yeah, I guess that’s true [laughs]. There’s piano and a bunch of organs.

There’s that one performance of you guys playing the new album’s first track “Here to Fall” on a rooftop and you looked like you were having a good time with all the effects pedals hooked up to your Wurlitzer.

When we first wrote that song, I was playing it on piano. And I’m almost sure it was James who suggested trying it on the Wurlitzer and plugging it into a fuzzbox and then the wah-wah pedal. I think most of that stuff came from James. It definitely had a sound unlike any other one. We were certainly grabbed by it. And then a couple of other things led to trying out a few of the other sounds at the beginning. We were working on trial and error.

You also worked with Cadet Records composer/arranger Richard Evans. How did you hook up with him to do the strings on “If It’s True”?

We had the idea of trying to find an old school string arranger and he was number one on our want list. James just went on the Internet and managed to search him and find out that he’s teaching in Berklee [College of Music] up in Boston. He just sent him a cold email, and next thing you knew he was hearing from Richard Evans.

It’s pretty extraordinary how accessible some people are online. I just sent Doug Yule an email about an interview and he got right back to me.

Oh yeah, how’s he doin’?

He does an old-timey band up in Seattle called RedDog. He still has that great voice. Moe Tucker [Velvet Underground] had a very distinct voice as well, and I definitely hear a little of her in Georgia’s singing, in a way.

Yeah, I love Moe’s singing and I’ve heard that myself [in Georgia's singing]. I’ve read other people make that same observation.

Georgia didn’t start singing until Fakebook [1990], if I’m not mistaken.

Yo La Tengo by Steve Gullick

Pretty much. She sang the tiniest bit before that but she was extremely, extremely reluctant to sing. It was a pretty slow process. She sings on the records a little bit prior to Fakebook, but she certainly never sang a lead vocal until Fakebook.

Did you always know she had such a lovely voice?

Oh yeah, yeah [laughs]. I always encouraged her to sing.

Speaking of Fakebook, how did you guys come up with the concept of your covers album as the Condo Fucks, Fuckbook?

The name is an old name in our world. Even at the time, we forgot how old it is. We were referencing the inner sleeve to the [vinyl version of] I Can Hear The Heart Beating As One [1997]. We did kind of a old fashioned homage to old label inner sleeves in which different records on the label would be highlighted. So, we did our own where we made one for Matador; we made up a bunch of records and the Condo Fucks was one of them. And at the time, and that’s what we were remembering, but it’s only occurred to us in talking about it that Georgia did the cover art for a Homestead compilation called Human Music that we appear on. And when she was doing a mock-up of it, she didn’t know who was going to be on the record, but in the space where she knew the groups would be listed she was writing in band names just to get a feel for how it would look, and one of the names she wrote was the Condo Fucks. So, she came up with that name. I don’t remember what year that was but a long time ago, and we just dredged it back up for I Can Hear The Heart Beating As One.

Well, it certainly is a name for its time, especially given the gentrification of certain parts of Manhattan and Brooklyn over the years.

Well, I’m sure she was referencing more about Hoboken, which hits a little closer to home.

When did you guys first perform as Yo La Tengo?

It was at Maxwell’s for a party with Antietam. Antietam’s second show, our first.

How many people showed up?

Well, it felt like a million [laughs]. Too many, it was terrifying.

I’m sure after a few beers it got more fun.

I think after a few years, it got a little more fun [laughs]. Something we learned pretty quickly was that you think it’s gonna be easy to perform to your friends but there’s actually no harder audience. I don’t necessarily mean that they’re tough on you, but it’s just harder to play for people you know. Playing for strangers is much easier [laughs].

Have you been to Citifield yet?

I have not. I went to one Mets game last year. I drove down to Philadelphia to spend a couple of days there. The Philadelphia ICA had an exhibit of Sun Ra memorabilia, so I drove down and went to that and went to a Mets-Phillies game.

Were you sad to see Shea go?

You know, I was and I wasn’t. It wasn’t a very good place to see a game. But at the same time, part of your life gets knocked down with it. But clearly I was under no illusions about its attributes as a ballpark.

Yo La Tengo Tour Dates :: Yo La Tengo News :: Yo La Tengo Concert Reviews

JamBase | Hoboken
Go See Live Music!


John Hughes: New Album on 1320

JOHN HUGHES NEW STUDIO ALBUM, RESET THE WAREHOUSE

TO BE RELEASED MAY 18 ON 1320 RECORDS; HUGHES ON THE ROAD WITH STS9 FOR SELECT DATES

John Hughes

STS9‘s boutique record label,
1320 Records, proudly presents Reset the Warehouse, the new studio release from John Hughes (May 18, 2010).

A new recording studio, a new record label, and a new record allow John Hughes to step out from the familiar
surroundings of Hefty Records, the label he founded in 1996, to strengthen his creative partnership with 1320
Records.

Though Hughes has collaborated with label-founders STS9 for years, this marks his first official release on 1320 – an alliance long in the making, given both parties’ shared mission of creating and supporting new music under artist-run labels. Like Hefty, 1320 is an independent, musician-run collective that stresses cooperation between the artist
and label.

As Hughes explains, “I wanted this recording to have a live, gritty sound, so I took it outside of the computer as
much as I could. It was mixed through a board to tape, and the synths are all analog. Within the context of an electronic record, the live performances also help give it a warm, organic feel.”

When it came time to edit and mix the tracks, Hughes looked to vibraphonist Rick Embach, who was
involved in the sessions from the earliest stages, as well as his old friend Joshua Eustis of Telefon Tel Aviv. Hughes brought his
recording sessions to Eustis’ studio in Chicago, and together they mixed the tracks thorough an analog mixing
board and then to two-track tape, giving the album the finishing touches and appropriate analog “glue” it required.

Click here to view the
entire supporting cast of Reset the Warehouse.

Reset the Warehouse Track List:

1. “A Reflection of the Times”
2. “Waukee Wallop”
3. “Another One”
4. “Reset The Warehouse”
5. “Pterodactyl Piano Bar”
6. “Little Dot in the Sky”
7. “Done Everything”
8. “Moan Pop Asheesh”
9. “Witchfinger”
10. “You Don’t Love Me”
11. “Wow, I Think I Love You”
12. “Naphtha Jets”

John Hughes Tour Dates :: John Hughes News :: John Hughes Concert Reviews


Google Buys Game Maker LabPixies to Boost iGoogle in EMEA

Google April 27 agreed to purchase LabPixies in a move to fortify its popular iGoogle personalized homepage. LabPixies makes widgets for gaming, task and other programs users can install on their iGoogle pages with a single click to kill some time. The startup also makes widgets for Apple’s iPhone, Google’s Android platform and Facebook, among other social platforms. The LabPixies team will be based in Google’s Tel Aviv office, helming the company’s iGoogle work in Europe, the Middle East and Africa.

Google April 27 agreed to purchase game software maker LabPixies in a
move to fortify its popular iGoogle personalized homepage, which now boasts
more than 100,000 gadgets.
LabPixies makes widgets for gaming, task and other smallish
programs, which users can install on their iGoogl…


Les Claypool | 03.25 | Tel Aviv

Words by: Kevin Schwartzbach | Images by: Goni Riskin

Les Claypool :: 03.25.10 :: The Barby :: Tel Aviv, Israel

Les Claypool :: 03.25 :: Israel

The threshold has been broken. Finally, Israel has received its first exposure to the American jam music scene. It’s not that Israelis don’t get their fair share of improvisational acts, they just don’t get any of the acts that make up the jam band scene that has flourished in the States. As is, even some of the most music savvy Israelis aren’t remotely familiar with bands likes The Grateful Dead or Phish. And there seems to be a clear distinction amongst Israeli youths between going to a show and going out dancing (with an arguable overlap in the realm of DJ ruled electronic music). For the most part, the crowd remained unapologetically static throughout the show, at least until the very end. That’s not to say they weren’t enjoying the music, it’s just that for them, concerts are more of a spectacle than a chance to interact with the music by getting down and grooving out, as it tends to be treated within the American jam scene. But hopefully, all that is about to change.

The jam scene could not have sent a better emissary to facilitate that change. While labeling Les Claypool any one genre might be a contentious claim, there’s no denying that since his collaboration with Trey Anastasio in Oysterhead back in 2000 and his subsequent project Colonel Claypool’s Fearless Flying Frog Brigade, Claypool has become a bona fide constituent of the jam world. And suffice it to say that this night at Tel Aviv’s Barby was heavy on the jams.

Claypool though was not venturing to Israel without a reputation preceding him. Apparently, many Israelis are quite familiar with Primus, Claypool’s first successful project, so much so that Claypool’s Israeli debut saw The Barby filled to its capacity. Few in the crowd, however, seemed to be remotely aware of any of Claypool’s post-Primus projects (aside from one guy in the crowd wearing a Buckethead getup alluding to his collaboration with the guitar virtuoso in Colonel Claypool’s Bucket Of Bernie Brains. Though the only Primus tune played during the show was “Duchess and the Proverbial Mind Spread,” any familiarity with Primus’ material was enough to prepare one for the dementedly bizarre music Claypool served up from his many other projects.

Sam Bass :: 03.25 :: Israel

In formal tuxedos, all wearing Claypool’s signature Clockwork Orange-like mask, the quartet took the stage. “It’s great to be here in Tel Aviv, though it’s a bit different than Amsterdam,” said Claypool, fresh off a three night run at Jam in the Dam, before jumping into a story about how in Amsterdam at the same gift shop that he purchased a large stuffed animal for his daughter, they were also selling living peyote cacti. “This leads into our next song that’s about a bunch of mushrooms that come to life,” talking about “Amanitas” off his latest solo release, Of Fungi and Foe, which was, in part, the soundtrack for an interactive videogame for Wii called Mushroom Men about a meteor that hits the earth and bestows intelligence and mobility to the mushrooms at the crash site.

“Cosmic Highway” was one of the longest, most riveting jams of the night. Vibraphonist/percussionist Mike Dillon‘s tablas gave the song an ethnic feel, allowing for a seamless yet brief “Kashmir” tease. Dillon switched over to vibraphone, trading off face-melting licks with his bandleader. The distorted sound of Sam Bass‘ green cello soon took over. In the absence of a guitar or any other lead instruments, both Bass’ cello and Dillon’s vibraphone took on much bigger roles than I’d seen in previous Claypool ensembles to fill the void. The crowd responded well to the Jewish sounding bass line from “Cosmic Highway,” letting out boisterous applause.

While Claypool is renowned for his virtuosic slap-bass technique used on his Carl Thompson electric bass, he can also put on quite a display on his fretless standup and single string bass-like instrument known as the Whamola. Claypool traded off haunting downward glissandos on his fretless with Bass during a lengthy jam from “Red State Girl.” After a pounding display of “drums” from Dillon and drummer Paulo Baldi (Cake, Deadweight, Eric McFadden Trio), Claypool returned to the stage shrouded by an ape mask, ready to take on his Whamola. I’m not quite sure where he acquired this odd instrument, but Jesus can he play that thing, hitting it with a drumstick with one hand and pulling on the back of the string altering the tension, and consequently the pitch, with the other.

Finally towards the end of the set, the sheer energy of the music got people moving (though it was more moshing than actual dancing). “David Makalaster,” with its children’s song-like chorus, was the longest jam of the night. The set closed with “One Better,” which was undoubtedly the climax of the show.

“When I was a young fellow,” began Claypool coming out for the encore, “I was enamored with Geddy Lee.” Les has the distinct honor of inducting Rush into the Canadian Songwriter Hall of Fame soon, and needs to perform a Rush song during the ceremony. “Learning a Rush song is fucking hard,” quipped Claypool. “So, we’re gonna use you folks as an experiment.” Their rendition of “The Spirit of Radio” was immaculately accurate, aside from a slight reggae detour. Bass’ cello, with just a tinge of distortion, did a stunning job at replicating all the complicated guitar parts originally played by Alex Lifeson.

Israel’s first exposure to the U.S. jam world was a huge success, as people spewed out on to the streets of Tel Aviv smiling. Hopefully this Les Claypool show opens the floodgates for other jam bands to make the trip over here. Many of the necessary elements to facilitate these bands are already in place – multi-day festivals like Boombamela and a multitude of nameless trance parties, and of course, hippies. All they need is an influx of crunchy bands; the music scene here would welcome them with open arms.

Les Claypool :: 03.25.10 :: The Barby :: Tel Aviv, Israel
Up on The Roof > Duchess and The Proverbial Mind Spread, Amanitas, Cosmic Highway, Red State Girl > You Can’t Tell Errol Anything > Precipitation > Drums > Buzzards Of Green Hill > David Makalaster, One Better

Encore: The Spirit of Radio (Rush), ???

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Les Claypool Tour Dates :: Les Claypool News :: Les Claypool Concert Reviews

JamBase | Middle East
Go See Live Music!


Yo La Tengo | 03.22 & 03.23 | Tel Aviv

Words by: Kevin Schwartzbach | Images by: Goni Riskin

Yo La Tengo :: 03.22 & 03.23 :: Barby :: Tel Aviv, Israel

Ira Kaplan :: March, 2010 :: Tel Aviv, Israel

You never know quite what to expect from Yo La Tengo. With an extraordinarily diverse repertoire ranging from long-winded psychedelic jams to poppy heartfelt love ballads and everything in between, it’s impossible to predict the character of any given live show. Hell, with this Hoboken-based trio it can be hard enough to predict whose going to be playing which instrument.

What’s truly remarkable about the diversity of their music though is that there isn’t any of the pretentious artistic posturing found in so many bands labeled as “indie.” With Yo La Tengo there really is no “point” greater than the music itself. Sure they can be experimental, but not for the sake of experimentation alone. And yes they can be poetic, but not for the sake of poetry. The various roads they explore in different genres and with different elements are merely a means of self-expression. And what they lack in focus, they make up for in creativity. But despite their often seemingly disconnected discography, there’s a certain unpolished grunginess to their music that serves as a common thread – their unique artistic trademark.

It’s only fitting than that the band’s chosen venue for their two-night tenure in Tel Aviv would be the Barby, a grungy hole-in-the-wall type place located in the southern part of the city. But as the old saying goes, don’t judge a concert venue by its facade – the Barby is one of Tel Aviv’s biggest and most acoustically well-built joints.

Israeli folk-rocker Geva Alon began the first evening armed with nothing more than his voice and an acoustic guitar. Despite his limited resources, the solitary Alon managed to create a somber yet energetic aura filled with emotion that mesmerized the crowd. His deep Johnny Cash-like voice matched with his folksy guitar licks gave him a rather unique sound. And though he addressed the crowd in his native Hebrew, he managed to vividly express himself with a subtle mastery of the English language. “Lately I began to wonder/ What’s there for me around this town?/ Whose skyline shape seems like forever growing monsters/ It gets me down, so down” Alon belted out in the song “Get Closer Now” off his latest, similarly titled album Get Closer. Taking a break from his lyrical insight, Alon showed impressive guitar chops, taking a bluesy solo on top of self-provided loops.

Yo La Tengo :: March, 2010 :: Tel Aviv, Israel

From the get go, Yo La Tengo made it clear that their stay in Israel was going to be heavy on the noise, creating a wall of feedback before dropping into “Big Day Coming” to start things off. Ira Kaplan (vocals, guitar, keyboards) was quick to relinquish his spot behind his warbling keyboard, grabbing his beat up Fender Jazzmaster from the burly James McNew (bass, vocals, and occasionally keyboards, guitar, drums) to deliver the first of many noise-bending solos. Whether it be pounding indiscriminately on the keys or waving his guitar around to harness the feedback, Kaplan’s distorted, effect-laden noise improvisations seemed his favorite mode of expression.

I didn’t quite know how an Israeli crowd would take such far out sounds, but it seemed to be well received. “We were doing some interviews before the show,” began Kaplan in between songs, “and a bunch of people asked us what we expect from these shows. Well, we didn’t really have any expectations. We didn’t even know if people here know who we are.” Surprisingly, much of the crowd seemed to be well versed in Yo La Tengo’s vast material, as song names flew at the stage during every opportune moment (to which the band often obliged).

While they’ve always had a proclivity for the experimental, what makes Yo La Tengo’s music so interesting is the juxtaposition of this experimentation with more conventional elements. It’s no surprise that they’re often compared to 1960′s avant-garde rock groups such as The Velvet Underground. VU’s influence on YLT was clear in Kaplan’s Lou Reed-like voice as well as the droning guitars. Kaplan’s wife Georgia Hubley‘s (drums, vocals and occasionally guitar) voice too has a certain Nico-like grace to it. And like Maureen Tucker, Hubley is one of the few noteworthy female drummers in rock.

Georgia Hubley :: March, 2010 :: Tel Aviv, Israel

Hubley came out from behind her kit to play some guitar and sing for us on Electr-O-Pura‘s “Decora” and “When It’s Dark” from their latest release Popular Songs. Both nights saw all three members moving from instrument to instrument showing a rare level of musical versatility.

In typical Yo La Tengo fashion the trio effortlessly shifted genres over the course of the evening, keeping the crowd on edge. From the trudging post-rock crescendo of “More Stars Than There Are in Heaven” to the swinging minor blues progression of “Periodically Double or Triple” to the power-pop edginess of “Sugarcube,” they really managed to cover all their bases. The mostly instrumental “Pass the Hatchet, I think I’m Goodkind” closed off the first night’s set with their trippiest display yet in a lengthy psychedelic exploration. Over McNew’s steady bass line, Kaplan switched back and forth between demonic noise solos and (slightly) more conventional guitar solos.

The second night bore much similarity to the first. Geva Alon opened up again, playing a nearly identical set to the night before. The Jersey natives began with the jazzy “Our Way to Fall.” Like the first night, the second night was a healthy mix of noise solos and more straight ahead pop and rock tunes, but also saw a few wholly instrumental songs like “And the Glitter is Gone.”

James McNew :: March, 2010 :: Tel Aviv, Israel

Though most of the second night consisted of songs we’d yet to hear, they opted to repeat a few tunes from the night before such as “If It’s True” and “When It’s Dark” among others in support of the new album – a bit disappointing given the band’s enormous repertoire and limited opportunity to see them here. As promised from the night before, “Autumn Sweater,” one of their more popular numbers, came out early in the set and was one of the highlights of the evening.

The band’s personalities seemed to shine through much more brightly on the second night, as Kaplan more often took breaks between songs to banter with the crowd in a joking manner. Their quirkiness and geekish connoisseurship of obscure music manifested itself in several choice covers including Sun Ra’s odd “Nuclear War,” during which Kaplan jumped into the crowd, gathering a few people to help him repeat Sun Ra’s hilariously dire proposed consequences of a nuclear fallout. In honor of their stay in Israel they ended their first of two encores with a song by a Jewish artist, Jeffry Ross Hyman – better known as Joey Ramone. Taking a moment to get into character, they charged right into “Sheena Was a Punk Rocker” rocking out in a way that would have made the punk legend proud.

Few bands can pull off what Yo La Tengo does during live shows, jumping from song to song with a complete disregard of defined genre boundaries. But a genuine artistic drive gives this gifted trio the ability to go in just about any direction; what makes them so compelling is that they take the audience with them.

Setlists

03.22.10 :: Barby :: Tel Aviv, Israel

Big Day Coming, More Stars Than There Are in Heaven, Tears Are in Your Eyes, Stockholm Syndrome, Here to Fall, If It’s True, Mr. Tough, I’m On My Way, Decora, When It’s Dark, Periodically Double or Triple, Deeper Into Movies, Nothing to Hide, Sugarcube, Pass the Hatchet I Think I’m Goodkind

First Encore: From A Motel 6, The Kid With The Replaceable Head (Richard Hell cover), Can’t Forget

Second Encore: Big Sky (The Kinks cover), You Can Have It All (KC and the Sunshine Band cover)

03.23 :: :: Barby :: Tel Aviv, Israel

Our Way to Fall, And the Glitter is Gone, Little Eyes, Autumn Sweater, Periodically Double or Triple, The Weakest Part, Here to Fall, If It’s True, I’m On My Way, Black Flowers, When It’s Dark, More Stars Than There Are in Heaven, Cherry Chapstick, Tom Courtenay, Nothing to Hide, Blue Line Swinger

First Encore: Nuclear War (Sun Ra cover), Last Days of Disco, Sheena Is a Punk Rocker (Ramones cover)

Second Encore: Griselda (The Holy Modal Rounders cover), Take Care (Big Star cover)

Yo La Tengo Tour Dates :: Yo La Tengo News :: Yo La Tengo Concert Reviews

JamBase | Israel
Go See Live Music!


Partizan loses to Maccabi in second game

Partizan Belgrade basketball club was defeated by Israeli team Maccabi in Tel Aviv on Thursday evening. The final score was 98-78 (26-24, 28-15, 19-19, 25-20 by quarters).

Partizan beats Maccabi in Tel Aviv

Partizan basketball club defeated Israel’s Maccabi Tel Aviv away last night in the first match of the Euroleague quarterfinals. The end score was 85-77 (12-27, 20-19, 26-20, 27-11 by quarters).

Metallica Fans Boycott Band’s First Israeli Concert In 10 Years

Metallica fans in Israel have vowed to boycott the band’s upcoming show in Tel Aviv amid complaints of soaring ticket prices. The hitmakers are scheduled to play at Ramat Gan Stadium on May 22 in what will be the band’s first concert in Israel since 1999. But the news has promoted outrage from fans who [...]

Alan Parsons: Album and Dates

Frontiers Records Signs Alan Parsons, Releases Eye 2 Eye – Live In Madrid

Alan Parsons

Studio wizard Alan Parsons returns with a live concert recording, Eye 2 Eye – Live In Madrid to be released March 19 in Europe and April 6 in the USA on Frontiers Records.

Eye 2 Eye – Live In Madrid was filmed and recorded at the May 14, 2004 show at Playa Mayor in Madrid, Spain. The location is a gorgeous plaza surrounded by historic buildings and is a legacy to a very fine performance from an outstanding group of musicians.

Alan Parsons’ career started aged 19 when he worked on The Beatles’ last two albums, Let It Be and then Abbey Road, an album recorded in the legendary London studios of the same name. He soon became a well respected studio engineer and producer, working for Paul McCartney, John Miles, The Hollies, Al Stewart and Pink Floyd among others. He is particularly renowned for his work on the Pink Floyd masterpiece Dark Side of The Moon. This classic album was recorded in 1972, and Parsons’ contribution to the album is legendary.

As well as receiving gold and platinum awards from many nations, Alan Parsons has received 12 Grammy Award nominations for engineering and production.

Track Listing:

I Robot
Can’t Take It With You
Don’t Answer Me
Breakdown / The Raven
Time; Psychobabble
I Wouldn’t Want To Be Like You
Damned If I Do; More Lost Without You
Don’t Let It Show; Prime Time
Sirius / Eye In The Sky
(The System Of) Dr. Tarr and Professor Fether
Games People Play

Tour Dates

3/07/2010 – Tel Aviv, Israel

3/08/2010 – Tel Aviv, Israel

3/14/2010 – Congress Centre – Prague, Czech Republic
3/16/2010 – Sala Kongresowa – Warsaw, Poland
3/18/2010 – Bratislava, Slovakia
3/20/2010 – Moscow, Russia

3/21/2010 – St. Petersburg, Russia

3/22/2010 – St. Petersburg, Russia

6/01/2010 – The Olympia – Paris, France


Infected Mushroom | 02.11 | Tel Aviv

Words by: Kevin Schwartzbach | Images from: myspace.com/infectedmushroomcentral

Infected Mushroom :: 02.11.10 :: Ganey HaTaarucha :: Tel Aviv, Israel

Infected Mushroom :: 02.11 :: Israel

Anywhere else in the world, Infected Mushroom would have been just another concert. The band receives decent recognition internationally for their continuous efforts since the mid ’90s making genre-bending, if not genre-creating, trance-fusion music. But when this Israeli-bred band returns home from their extensive world touring to regale their countrymen it’s more than just a display of highly innovative music, more than just a raging trance party that captivates the senses for hours on end – it’s a cultural celebration.

Arguably the biggest band to come out of Israel in the country’s short history, both on a local and international scale, their homecomings are always joyous occasions. At their first show of 2010 in Israel, Infected brought it harder than usual, making their last show in Jerusalem back in December seem tame by comparison. Though only about an hour (or considerably less than that if you drive like most Israelis) away, Tel Aviv exhibits a wholly different ethos than Jerusalem. While Jerusalem has more of a pious atmosphere, being a spiritual haven for three of the world’s major religions, Tel Aviv is, well, more of a party town. The myriad of yarmulkes present at the Jerusalem show was replaced with glow sticks and body paint. And that willingness to party hard was duly reciprocated by Israel’s biggest musical act, bringing in special guest Matisyahu for the occasion.

Countless people came out to Ganey HaTaarucha to get down with Infected Mushroom, in numbers that ironically few local acts are capable of attracting. A giant inflatable humanoid mushroom with razor sharp teeth and ominously glowing eyes stood at the back of stage with a maniacal grin spread across his face and “Infected” tattooed across his chest. He resembled Toad from Mario if he had decided to turn evil and was subsequently recruited by Bowser. The now-quintet took the stage with a gallant vigor. “I’m gonna push you until you’re gonna get it,” screamed Amit “Duvdev” Duvdevani (lead vocals) emphatically, jumping right into “Poquito Mas” off the new album, The Legend of the Black Shwarma.

Infected Mushroom :: 02.11 :: Israel

Originally Infected was a duo consisting of Duvdev and Erez Eisen (keyboards, turntables), but have been slowly adding members to their psychedelic ensemble over the last few years. Today most of their live shows are given with the aid of a full live band complete with drum kit and guitar(s). It is this organic accompaniment, supplementing the usual synthesizers and drum machines regularly found in trance music that gives them such a big and unique sound. Over time that sound has evolved from what used to be straight-ahead trance to their present-day idiosyncratic trance-fusion, mixing in elements of psychedelic rock and heavy metal. Much of their set came off their latest release, the most heavy metal influenced album to date. And with guitarists Erez Netz and Tom Cunningham shredding throughout the night, the show often felt more like a rock concert than a trance party.

It wasn’t long before Matisyahu joined them for the first of many guest turns. The American stood out like a sore thumb with his long Hassidic beard, hippie-like garb and intimidating stature (standing at roughly 6’5″) against the backdrop of his Israeli cohorts. But sonically his jubilantly optimistic reggae sound meshed well with Infected’s dark, coarse trance-rock fusion. The heavy four-to-the-floor beat of “Saeed,” with its ominous feel, transitioned surprisingly well into the jovially bouncy syncopation of Matisyahu’s “One Day.”

A mix of their well-known older material saw Infected Mushroom at their tranciest, and the crowd at the most hectic. “Cities of the Future,” quite possibly the band’s best known song, came out early in the set to a torrent of applause. Despite the song’s aforementioned fame, Infected did a good job of defying expectations to keep things interesting. “I found myself,” shrieked Duvdev repeatedly as the song slowly built up, the whole crowd anticipating the song’s tumultuous peak right afterwards as found on 2004′s IM the Supervisor, but instead dropping into a warbling breakdown that once again slowly built itself up before finally fulfilling expectations.

Matisyahu with Infected Mushroom :: 02.11 :: Israel

Set closer “Becoming Insane” was the only evidence of Infected’s Middle-Eastern origin during the show. The ethnic guitar line melted into a pulsing beat that sent ripples through the cavernous room, while ghostly, strobing lights flashed in rhythm with the music.

“In-fec-ted” chanted the awaiting crowd in unison with drummer Rogerio Jardim‘s bass drum before the Brazilian’s solo that started off the first of two encores. “I Wish” was the lone song of the first encore, manifesting itself in a rather progressive interpretation, moving through many different sections fluidly linked together, including a dubbed out portion with Matisyahu’s spitfire rapping. The second encore consisted of “Special Place” to close out Infected’s show with a bang.

But the party was far from over. As the dance floor became more sparsely populated (giving us more room to dance), Israeli DJ Astrix kept us writhing for hours longer, mixing a selection of tracks that was more straight-ahead psy-trance than the Infected Mushroom set. Astrix, born Avi Shmailov, is also one of Israel’s leading psy-trance acts and has been making waves internationally over the last few years, having been ranked #18 on DJ Magazine‘s top 100 DJs list in 2007.

With the first flickers of morning sunlight on the horizon, traces of throbbing beats and flashing lights still fresh in my mind, the evening finally came to a close. It’s a rarity for a local act to put on a musical event of this magnitude. With such a unique sound and overpowering live performances it’s no wonder that Infected Mushroom has grown to the level of popularity that they have both in Israel and abroad.

Infected Mushroom tour dates available here.

JamBase | Middle East
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Balkan Beat Box: Album/Tour

Balkan Beat Box’s Blue Eyes Black Boy Out April 27
March Tour Dates Confirmed

Balkan Beat Box

Balkan Beat Box‘s highly anticipated new set, Blue Eyed Black Boy, is due out April 27 on Nat Geo Music. The album follows 2007′s Nu Med.

Blue Eyed Black Boy was recorded in Tel Aviv and Belgrade in the midst of anti-Kosovo riots.

“It was a very tense atmosphere, but we were in our studio, away from all that, translating that intense energy into something positive and good,” says Ori Kaplan, saxophone player and 1/3 of the Balkan Beat Box trio.

Self-produced by Balkan Beat Box, Blue Eyed Black Boy features a variety of musical instruments and guest appearances, including a local gypsy orchestra from Belgrade called Jovica Ajdarevic Orkestar. The album combines the musical elements of Mediterranean and Balkan traditions with hip hop beats and punk influences.

“It’s always amazing when the three of us get together in the studio,” says Kaplan. “It’s a great dynamic that none of us ever had before in a band, a true collaboration. Each of us has his specialty, Tamir brings the beats and production, Tomer is the lyricist, and I do the melodies and the horns. We bring these three elements together so naturally. We trigger off each other.”

Balkan Beat Box will bring their live show to the U.S. with a handful of tour dates in March.

Balkan Beat Box Tour Dates

March 11 Paradise Rock Club Boston, MA
March 12 9:30 Club Washington, DC
March 13 Webster Hall New York, NY
March 15 The Fillmore San Francisco, CA
March 16 Roseland Theatre Portland, OR
March 17 Showbox at The Market Seattle, WA
March 18 The Venue Vancouver, BC